What A Day - Trans Rights or Fillibust
Episode Date: May 1, 2023For more than two months, Nebraska State Senator Machaela Cavanaugh has filibustered nearly every single bill that has passed through the state legislature. It’s an effort to keep her Republican col...leagues from following other red states to ban gender-affirming care for trans youth. Sen. Cavanaugh joins us to talk about how she’s managed to hold the floor – and keep fighting.And in headlines: authorities in Texas are searching for a man accused of fatally shooting five of his neighbors, fighting continues in Sudan despite an extended cease-fire, and the federal government is reportedly scaling back drug screening rules to entice more young workers.Show Notes:Don’t Legislate Hate PAC: Donate Now – https://secure.actblue.com/donate/dont-legislate-hateWhat A Day – YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@whatadaypodcastCrooked Coffee is officially here. Our first blend, What A Morning, is available in medium and dark roasts. Wake up with your own bag at crooked.com/coffeeFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/crookedmedia/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
Discussion (0)
it's monday may 1st i'm treyville anderson and i'm priyanka arabindi and this is what a day where
we are thrilled to be the very first to report that jason derulo has fallen down the stairs of
the met gala that man will never know peace at any event that has stairs. So sorry.
So sorry to this man.
On today's show, federal regulators will weigh the fate of another regional bank.
Plus, the government is reportedly scaling back on its own drug screening rules to entice more young workers.
Yes, because, you know, the young workers like to puff puff pass, honey.
All right. Exactly. But first, the legislative fuckery in Republican led state legislatures
continues. The last few weeks, especially, we've brought y'all a number of stories about how
conservatives are working overtime to not only legislate and spread hate, but to try and silence
those opposing them. So late last week, Montana became the latest state
to ban or restrict gender-affirming health care for trans young people. This is the legislation
that Representative Zoe Zephyr, the state's first trans lawmaker, was censored for, saying its
supporters would have blood on their hands if they passed it, and they did it anyway. And then I'm
sure we all remember the racist shit show that
was Tennessee Republicans voting to expel Representatives Justin Jones and Justin
Pearson, two black Democrats, over their protests on the chamber floor against gun violence,
though Jones and Pearson were reinstated by officials in the districts they represent.
It's just amazing to watch how these lawmakers continue to show up so passionate
about what they believe in, in the face of hatred from the same body, the same place that they show
up to work every single day. It's wild to even think about. And you know, as a church queen,
because the indoctrination runs very deep over here, honey, I've been saying that it's giving David versus Goliath
or Daniel in the lion's den type energy
because of the scale of foolishness
that these elected officials are up against.
Truly.
But I want to introduce to some and present to others
another elected official who is fighting back.
I'm standing up against hate.
And you're standing side by side,
shoulder to shoulder against hate. And you're standing side by side, shoulder to shoulder with hate.
That is the voice of Nebraska State Senator Mikayla Kavanaugh. She represents the state's
6th district and has been standing oh so firmly in the way of her Republican colleagues who want
to ban gender-affirming care for trans youth in the state by filibustering every single bill that
comes to the floor. She said a number of weeks ago that she would, quote, burn this session to
the ground, and baby, she is doing just that. In fact, when I had the chance to chat with Senator
Michaela Kavanaugh late last week, we caught her literally minutes after she and her colleagues
narrowly blocked a six-week abortion ban from
advancing, ensuring that the medical procedure remains legal in Nebraska. I started by asking
her about the response she's received from her constituents and colleagues since she set out on
this path of filibustering everything that comes to the floor. From my constituents, it's been a
huge amount of support.
I am constantly being approached by people thanking me, people in law enforcement thanking me,
people in healthcare thanking me, parents, kids, teenagers thanking me, which is just really overwhelming. But it also helps to know that this is exactly what I'm supposed to be doing and why I am here. My colleagues are not thanking me quite
so much. I am standing in the way. Well, let me rephrase that. I am not standing in the way.
They are standing in the way of their bills moving forward because of their vote on LB 574,
the anti-gender affirming care bill. I am just forcing them a little bit on it. So yeah, we have passed, I think now we're up
to three bills. We are trucking along to the end quickly and have not passed much legislation.
Yeah, I love that reframing that they're standing in the way of you all getting stuff done because
they could be better. I know that you've been, you know, reading and exploring a
variety of like, you know, things as you've been filler bustering. Could you tell us about some of
those things you've been reading or saying to kind of fill the hours of the debate? I understand that
you've killed time talking about your favorite Girl Scout cookies or the plots to animated movies
that your kids might be watching? Like,
how do you go about deciding what to talk about on any given day?
You know, I wing it a lot. So I try as much as I can to stay on the topic of the bill.
But if you're spending eight hours on a bill, and it's one page long, that's a challenge. And so
when I'm in that kind of position, once I run out
of content that is relevant to the bill, I just talk about whatever strikes my fancy at the moment.
I have an ongoing conversation with myself about the Oxford comma and the controversy over it,
or whether you should use it or not use it. I also really like to talk about salad. I
don't know how I got onto it, but I talk about salad a lot for some reason. I love that. You
mentioned already that like some people have like criticized you for this particular strategy.
They say that you're standing in the way of like getting things done and even bills that like you might support,
you know, the quote unquote good ones. I first want to hear kind of your response just to that
idea that like you're blocking everything, but also why it's important to not only just filibuster
the quote unquote bad bills, but also the good ones. Yeah. Well, my strategy is to slow everything down to create pressure points and
essentially a sense of urgency over, is this really the bill that is most important to the
legislature? And if it is, then you shouldn't care about not getting anything passed. If this bill,
if this hate-filled anti-gender affirming care bill is the priority of the legislature, then fine, let's not pass anything else. That's my point. And unfortunately, bills that I like, bills that I think are really
worthwhile might have suffered because of this. But at the end of the day, if we allow this bill
to pass, we are legislating hate. We are legislating just another human rights and civil
rights violation into our statute. I
think that there's nothing more important than stopping that from happening. Yeah, you know,
I wonder if you think that this strategy is something that perhaps other Democrats in other
states, they're going through the exact same thing. They're, you know, Republican led state legislatures are passing or attempting to pass these exact same type of bills there.
I wonder if you think this is a strategy that others could or perhaps should kind of consider for themselves.
Well, I do push back on it being a strategy for Democrats.
I think that this is something that everyone should be fighting against. And everyone,
no matter your political affiliation, should be using every tool in your toolkit. Every state's
legislatures are different. Whatever tools you have in your toolkit, you should be using them
to stand up against civil rights and human rights violations. And you don't need to be a Democrat
to do that. You need to be a decent human being. And you need to be a good policymaker. And you don't need to be a Democrat to do that. You need to be a decent human being and you need to be a good policymaker and you need
to do what you were sent there to do, which is stand up for the most vulnerable people.
And legislating this type of vitriol is not what anybody was sent to do.
Absolutely.
I love that you said that.
As I mentioned, you know, state legislatures across the country are battling over anti-trans legislation.
Over in Montana, as I'm sure you've heard, Republicans have censured Representative Zoe
Zephyr for the rest of their legislative session because of her opposition to a similar gender
affirming care ban for trans youth. I wonder kind of just what was your reaction to that news,
especially knowing that she's opposing a very similar bill to the one that you're trying to block?
I think it is horrible.
I don't even know that I have the words to describe it.
In the Nebraska legislature several weeks ago, one of my colleagues filed a motion to censure me for similar words spoken.
And a vote has still not been taken on it, which I'm very grateful for.
But there's been attempts here to silence me. And so I understand what that could potentially be
like. And so I feel awful for Representative Zephyr. And, you know, she's doing an amazing
job. I follow her on her social media. I saw her just sitting out in the lobby area. She's
continuing to show up for her constituents, regardless of what others do to try to minimize
her voice and minimize the voice of her constituents.
But at the end of the day, this is about democracy.
When we see things like this happening to Representative Zephyr, this is an assault
on democracy.
She is an elected official who is there to represent a population of people.
You don't have to like what she has to say, but she's still there to represent them.
And it's not for the legislatures to squash her voice because they're squashing her constituents' voices.
Absolutely.
The gender-affirming care ban that you're trying to block is now in its, you know, final round of voting. During debate over the bill,
your colleague Senator Megan Hunt opposed the measure because it would prevent her trans child
from getting the care that he needs. And recently we saw on social media that an attorney has filed
a complaint against her alleging that, you know, there's a conflict of interest because of her
child's identity. From the outside looking in,
this seems very absurd and foolish to me. What was your reaction to that news?
It is absurd and it is foolish. And to call that gentleman an attorney is probably
a generous term and a disservice to the entire profession. It was a frivolous thing to do. And any self-respecting
attorneys are members of the court, really, and they have a duty to not do things like this. So
I think it's very egregious that that happened. The number of things that are actual conflicts
of interest in the Nebraska legislature that should be filed are not what's being taken up.
But instead, the fact that Senator Hunt has
a transgender child, and that's just harassment. It's an attack on her. It's an assault on her
child. And no one should stand for it. You've been at this filibustering for a few weeks now.
I am nine, nine, nine. My Lord today, that is a very long time. I imagine, and I know you've said in other interviews that it is, you know, mentally and emotionally tiring.
I'd love to know before I let you go, what has kept you going all these weeks?
What is encouraging you to push past the exhaustion to still show up and to still kind of execute this plan?
Well, really, the thing that started it, the thing that keeps me going, the purpose of it all
is that trans kids matter, that they need to see their elected officials fighting for them,
not fighting against them. And I can't fail them. Even if I am not able to stop this bill,
I need to know that I have done everything in my power to stand up for trans kids because they
matter. They are important and they are loved. There are days where I do not want to get out
of bed and come here and talk for 14 hours or however many hours.
But I know that if I don't, that they're going to get hurt. So I do.
That was my conversation with Nebraska State Senator Michaela Kavanaugh, wishing her and her colleagues continued success in blocking hate in the Cornhusker State.
And that is the latest for now. Let's get to some headlines. The search continues in Texas for a man accused
of fatally shooting five of his neighbors, including an eight-year-old boy, Friday night.
The attack happened in the rural town of Cleveland, about 45 minutes north of Houston.
It was reportedly touched off after a neighbor asked the 38-year-old suspect
to stop shooting an AR-15 rifle in his yard so his baby could sleep.
The suspect then opened fire into the neighbor's home before he fled the scene.
As of our record time Sunday evening, authorities are still looking
for the suspect himself and have offered a combined $80,000 reward for any tips leading to his arrest.
Meanwhile, Texas Governor Greg Abbott is once again doing the least to care about another
mass shooting in his state. In his first tweet about the attack on Sunday, Abbott said the
suspect was in the country quote-unquote illegally and even referred to the five victims as, quote, illegal immigrants. Investigators say
the victims were originally from Honduras, but haven't said anything about their immigration
status. Because seriously, Priyanka, why the hell does that even matter? Yeah. You know,
the expression beside the point, this is like on a completely different planet than the point.
It makes no sense.
Doesn't have a place in this conversation, I don't think.
At an update from Sudan,
war fighting continues between two rival military forces
despite both sides agreeing to extend a ceasefire for 72 more hours.
The weeks-long battle between the Sudanese military
and the paramilitary group known as the Rapid Support Forces or or RSF, has led to hundreds of deaths and thousands more people injured.
The death toll includes a dozen health workers, leading several aid agencies to evacuate their personnel.
And according to the World Health Organization, two-thirds of the hospitals in Khartoum, the nation's capital, have closed down. The Red Cross organized an aircraft to deliver eight tons of medical aid
and supplies to hospitals on Sunday, which is expected to treat more than 1,000 people.
Also on Sunday, the United States organized a second convoy in Port Sudan, bringing the total
number of evacuated Americans to nearly 1,000 since the violence broke out. Meanwhile, Sudanese
civilians remain trapped with diminishing supplies, and tens of thousands of others have escaped the violence and fled to neighboring countries.
A handful of big banks have reportedly placed bids to take over First Republic Bank,
which could become the third major American bank to fail in less than two months.
According to multiple outlets, the FDIC closed bidding by midday Sunday,
with prospective buyers including PNC Financial Services
and JPMorgan Chase, though the winning bidder wasn't announced by the time we went to record
the show at 9.30 p.m. Eastern Sunday. But in the words of YG, basically, big bank take little bank.
Love that for them. The San Francisco-based lender is the latest mid-sized regional bank
to run into trouble since the demise of Silicon Valley Bank. Just last week, First Republic said that its customers have pulled
out more than $100 billion in deposits in the first quarter alone, sending its already battered
stock price into a tailspin. To give you a sense of how bad it is, in February, shares of First
Republic were trading at around $147. Right now, they're closer to $3.50, which
is super different. All of this comes despite the fact that First Republic received a $30 billion
lifeline from nearly a dozen other banks shortly after the SVB fiasco. Yeah, that is the especially wild part to me. It's like they stepped up and did something that is so,
I think, unique and not what you typically see in this industry.
And it still wasn't enough.
That's pretty crazy.
Yeah.
As the federal government looks to younger candidates
to replace its aging workforce,
drug screening rules are looking to get a little chiller.
Currently, federal job applicants in the United States
are required to disclose their drug use
over the past seven years.
But under new rules proposed by the Biden administration,
that timeframe would be brought down to just five years.
And applicants would only be required
to abstain from using marijuana for 90 days
before submitting their application.
Some federal agencies have already rolled back
their drug use restrictions.
Just last year, the CIA started telling applicants that they only needed to refrain from cannabis for 90 days as opposed
to their previous one-year rule. And many federal officials have stated that they don't believe
recreational marijuana use should disqualify candidates looking to work for the government.
Still, don't expect to see the term 420-friendly on these job postings anytime soon. Federal
employees are still banned from using marijuana once hired,
even in states that have legalized the drug.
But with polls showing that a majority of Americans
have tried cannabis,
scaling back drug use restrictions
would make these jobs much more accessible.
The Biden administration is expected
to propose the rule change later this year.
I'm sure the crazies over at Fox
and like wherever else they hang out,
now that Tucker Carlson isn't there,
are gonna take that super well.
But I feel like it's just a good move to get normal people working in the government. I mean, also, let's be real. We know plenty of federal workers who are doing a lot harder doing much worse.
Some marijuana. OK, then some reefer, as my granny used to call it. So I need them to calm
down. You know, Madison Cawthorn blew the lid off that one. Never to be heard from again.
Just pointing that one out. So, yeah, this seems relatively harmless in comparison.
Absolutely. And those are the headlines. We'll be back after some ads to recap all
the well-meaning cringe of the White House Correspondents Dinner.
It's Monday, WOD Squad, and for today's Temp Check, we are talking about the White House event that boldly asks,
What if the press had a Golden Globes with no awards?
The annual White House Correspondents Dinner came and went this past Saturday, hosted by The Daily Show's Roy Wood Jr.
As part of his duties,
Wood took aim at Washington politics.
In a joke about France's recent retirement age protests,
he quipped,
Meanwhile, in America,
we have an 80-year-old man begging us
for four more years of work.
While the night has long stood
as a celebration of the free press,
plenty of non-journalists
were also among the 2,600 or so guests in attendance.
Julia Fox was there. She posed for a picture with Chuck Schumer, of all people. The Property
Brothers did some light sketch comedy. And even Bravo's own Lisa Vanderpump showed up on the red
carpet. Truly a who's who got over there. The night wasn't all fun and games, though, as Saturday's
event saw strong calls for the release of the wrongfully detained American journalist Evan Gerskovich in Russia and Austin Tice in Syria.
As is tradition, President Biden stood and delivered some jokes at the top of the show,
poking fun at DeSantis and Trump, Rupert Murdoch, and of course, himself.
Before handing the podium over to Roy Wood Jr., he left the crowd with this.
I'm going to turn this over to Roy.
Roy, the podium is yours.
I'm going to be fine with your jokes,
but I'm not sure about Dark Brandon.
Oh, God.
Mm-mm.
Mm-mm.
So, Trayvon, I ask you this,
though I feel like we've already answered
is dark brandon officially over now oh it's been over it's it has been over okay i'm glad that you
know he wants to signal that he's hip you know he's with the times he knows what's going on
talking about yes on the internet And I love that for him.
I will also just note that my favorite joke that Roy Wood Jr. said, he was talking about
erasure.
And he said something to the effect of like, you know, black people only like erasure when
it involves Clarence Thomas.
And I thought that was hilarious.
What about you, Priyanka?
What did you think?
So Dark Brandon on that topic.
Yes, certainly over.
Our producer told us that they're making merch now.
I didn't know if they were doing that previously, but that is, I'm so sorry.
They all start out as sweet internet trends and then they are like, I hate that.
But no, to be honest, I really kind of did not tune into very much of this year's recap
maybe i have to like refresh and watch it and like actually see who was on that red carpet and
what outfits they wore i've kind of unsubscribed this year but maybe it's time to tune back in
maybe maybe not you know i don't think you missed anything you didn't miss much that's kind of what
i was thinking you know i was like do i really care anyways just like that we have checked our temps we weren't invited i don't know
why we correspond regularly so i'll tune in when i'm invited can my temperature be salty because
that's all for today if you like the show make sure you subscribe leave a review let your federal
employees chill out and tell your friends to listen and if you're into reading and not just
the always confusing mac gala theme statement like me. What a day is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at crooked.com slash subscribe.
I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
I'm Trevelle Anderson.
And happy International Workers Day.
Yes, all support to the workers always.
I have nothing more to add.
Yes.
Retweet.
What's the blue sky version of that
is it called
re-skating
oh god
oh yeah
no shit
shit
sorry
nevermind
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